ISO/IEC 17025 is the international standard that defines competence requirements for testing and calibration laboratories. As confirmed by ISO, laboratories accredited to this standard demonstrate that they operate competently and generate valid, traceable results — results that regulators, suppliers, and customers across 135 economies accept without requiring additional testing.
For a laboratory balance, ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation is not just a quality management overlay. It imposes specific, technically rigorous requirements on how the balance is calibrated, how measurement uncertainty is calculated and reported, how traceability to national standards is maintained, and how the balance’s calibration record supports every result the instrument contributes to an accredited report or certificate.
This article explains what ISO/IEC 17025 requires from a laboratory balance, how those requirements differ from GLP and GMP obligations, what the 2026 accreditation landscape looks like, and how to build a balance calibration program that satisfies accreditation requirements.
Table of Contents
What ISO/IEC 17025 Is and Who It Applies To
ISO/IEC 17025:2017 is published jointly by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). It applies to any laboratory that performs testing, calibration, or sampling and wants its results recognized as technically competent. As Wikipedia confirms, in most countries ISO/IEC 17025 is the standard against which laboratories must be accredited for regulatory authorities and suppliers to accept their test or calibration results.
Accreditation under ISO/IEC 17025 is performed by recognized national accreditation bodies — in the United States these include ANAB (ANSI National Accreditation Board), A2LA (American Association for Laboratory Accreditation), and NVLAP (National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program). As confirmed by IntuitionLabs, accreditation bodies that are signatories to the mutual recognition arrangement carry identical international acceptance — it does not matter which accreditation body is used, the results carry the same global recognition.
The January 2026 structural change: Effective January 1, 2026, ILAC (International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation) and IAF (International Accreditation Forum) merged to form the Global Accreditation Cooperation Incorporated — a single unified organization covering 135 economies and 11 accreditation scopes. Existing accreditations remain valid with no interruption. The former ILAC MRA and IAF MLA marks will be phased out by January 1, 2029. Laboratories should confirm that any new accreditation certificates or scope additions issued after January 2026 carry the updated marks from the Global Accreditation Cooperation framework.
How ISO/IEC 17025 Differs From GLP and GMP for Laboratory Balances
ISO/IEC 17025, GLP, and GMP all require calibrated, documented, traceable laboratory balances — but the emphasis, specificity, and verification approach differ materially.
| Requirement | ISO/IEC 17025 | GMP (FDA 21 CFR 211) | GLP (FDA 21 CFR 58) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Measurement uncertainty | Required — reported on every calibration certificate | Required under 2026 USP 41 | Not explicitly mandated |
| Calibration traceability | NIST or equivalent national body — mandatory | NIST-traceable | NIST-traceable |
| Calibration by accredited provider | Required for primary calibration | Strongly preferred | Not mandated |
| Equipment qualification (IQ/OQ/PQ) | Not the primary framework | Mandatory | Not formally required |
| External calibration | Required as primary method | Supplementary to internal | Defined in SOP |
| Scope of accreditation | Defines specific measurement capabilities | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Proficiency testing | Required for testing laboratories | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Internal audits | Required — scheduled and documented | Required | Required |
The most significant practical difference is the measurement uncertainty requirement. Under ISO/IEC 17025, every calibration result must include a reported measurement uncertainty expressed as an expanded uncertainty at a defined confidence level — typically 95% confidence. A balance calibration certificate that does not include this figure does not satisfy ISO/IEC 17025 requirements, regardless of how competent the technician who performed it was.
What ISO/IEC 17025 Requires From Laboratory Balance Calibration
The specific requirements that apply to laboratory balance calibration under ISO/IEC 17025 derive from Clause 6 (Resource Requirements) and Clause 7 (Process Requirements) of the standard.
Metrological traceability — Clause 6.5: All equipment used to generate measurement results must be calibrated with traceability to the International System of Units (SI) through an unbroken chain of calibrations. For a laboratory balance, this means the calibration weights used to calibrate the balance must themselves carry calibration certificates from an accredited calibration laboratory — certificates that document the mass values, the measurement uncertainty, and the traceability chain back to the national prototype.
A balance calibration performed with uncertified test weights breaks the traceability chain and does not satisfy Clause 6.5. The traceability requirement applies to the calibration weights, not just to the balance itself.
Measurement uncertainty — Clause 7.6: ISO/IEC 17025 requires that laboratories identify and evaluate contributions to measurement uncertainty for every measurement they perform. For balance calibration, the uncertainty budget must include at a minimum: repeatability of the balance, resolution uncertainty, calibration uncertainty of the reference weights, temperature effects, and any other significant environmental contributions identified during the calibration.
The expanded uncertainty — calculated by multiplying the combined standard uncertainty by a coverage factor of 2 for approximately 95% confidence — must be reported on every calibration certificate issued by an accredited laboratory. As confirmed by ANAB’s Technical Accreditation Requirements TR 2501 for scale and balance calibrations, this uncertainty reporting requirement applies specifically to balance calibrations performed within the scope of ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation.
Calibration by accredited providers: For laboratories seeking accreditation, the primary balance calibration — the formal event that produces the traceable calibration certificate — should be performed by an ISO/IEC 17025 accredited calibration service provider. The provider’s scope of accreditation must include mass measurement at the balance’s readability level. A calibration certificate from an unaccredited provider does not satisfy the traceability and uncertainty documentation requirements for accreditation purposes.
Calibration interval — risk-based and documented: ISO/IEC 17025 does not prescribe fixed calibration intervals. Intervals must be defined, documented, and justified based on a risk assessment that considers usage intensity, the criticality of the measurements performed, the balance’s historical performance data, and the environmental conditions of its installation. As Scispot confirms, a risk-based approach to calibration interval determination is a core element of the standard’s requirement for continual improvement.
The Calibration Certificate Required for ISO/IEC 17025 Compliance
A calibration certificate from an ISO/IEC 17025 accredited laboratory must contain specific elements to satisfy both the standard and the requirements of the accrediting body.
Required elements on an ISO/IEC 17025-compliant balance calibration certificate:
- Laboratory identification — name, address, and scope of accreditation reference
- Accreditation body logo and accreditation number
- Certificate issue date and unique identification number
- Description of the balance — model, serial number, asset ID, and location
- Environmental conditions during calibration — temperature, humidity, and any noted stability issues
- Reference weights used — weight class, serial numbers, and calibration certificate references with traceability chain
- Calibration results at each test point — nominal weight, measured value, deviation, and tolerance
- As-found data — readings before any adjustment was applied
- As-left data — readings after adjustment
- Measurement uncertainty at each test point — expressed as expanded uncertainty at 95% confidence with the coverage factor stated
- Pass/fail determination with the conformity decision rule applied — including whether the uncertainty was taken into account in the conformity assessment
- Authorized signatory and date
The conformity decision rule element deserves emphasis. Under ISO/IEC 17025:2017 Clause 7.8.6, when a laboratory states conformity with a specification, it must document the decision rule that determines how measurement uncertainty was considered in that determination. A simple “pass” statement without specifying whether uncertainty was included in the conformity assessment is non-compliant under the current version of the standard.

In-House Balance Verification vs Accredited Calibration Under ISO/IEC 17025
As covered in detail in our article on how to calibrate a lab balance, the distinction between daily in-house verification and formal accredited calibration applies with particular rigor under ISO/IEC 17025.
In-house verification — placing certified test weights on the balance and confirming the reading is within acceptance criteria — is a performance check. It does not produce an ISO/IEC 17025 compliant calibration certificate and does not satisfy the metrological traceability requirement of Clause 6.5 unless the test weights themselves carry accredited calibration certificates and the in-house check is performed within a documented, controlled procedure that has been assessed as part of the laboratory’s accreditation scope.
Accredited calibration produces the primary traceability chain and the uncertainty-documented certificate that satisfies Clause 6.5 and Clause 7.6. This calibration must be performed by an accredited provider at an interval justified by the laboratory’s risk assessment.
For laboratories seeking to use their own staff to perform primary balance calibrations within their accreditation scope, the laboratory’s mass calibration capability must itself be included in its scope of accreditation — meaning the laboratory must demonstrate to the accreditation body that it can perform calibrations with a defined and verified measurement capability, using reference weights traceable to national standards and with documented uncertainty evaluation.
Building a Balance Calibration Program for ISO/IEC 17025 Accreditation
A compliant balance calibration program under ISO/IEC 17025 requires these elements in a documented, implemented, and auditable form.
Reference weight procurement: Procure OIML E2 or ASTM Class 1 reference weights for analytical balance applications. Ensure the weights carry calibration certificates from an ISO/IEC 17025 accredited calibration laboratory, with measurement uncertainty reported at 95% confidence. Schedule recertification at intervals within the weight certificate’s validity period — typically every 12–24 months.
Calibration provider selection: Select a calibration service provider whose ISO/IEC 17025 scope of accreditation includes mass measurement at the readability level of your balance. Confirm the provider’s accreditation status before engaging — accreditation status can be verified through the accreditation body’s online registry. In the United States, A2LA, ANAB, and NVLAP all maintain searchable online registries of accredited laboratories.
Calibration interval justification: Document the risk assessment that justifies your calibration interval. Include usage frequency, application criticality, environmental stability, and historical calibration performance data. Review the interval annually and adjust based on trend data from successive calibration results.
Uncertainty budget: Maintain a documented uncertainty budget for the balance in its calibration context. This need not be performed from scratch for every calibration event — a standing uncertainty budget for each balance model and installation location, reviewed and updated when conditions change, satisfies the requirement.
Internal verification program: Implement daily or per-session in-house verification checks using the procured reference weights. Document each check — date, weight used, reading, and pass/fail against acceptance criteria. Retain records for the period required by your quality management system and accreditation body requirements.
Nonconformity and corrective action procedure: Document the procedure for responding to an out-of-tolerance finding — immediate removal from service, impact assessment on results generated since the last successful calibration, root cause investigation, corrective action, and return-to-service criteria. This procedure must be included in the quality management documentation assessed during the accreditation audit.
For the full environmental requirements that affect balance performance in any laboratory setting — and which form part of the IQ/OQ documentation reviewed during an ISO/IEC 17025 assessment — see our article on what affects lab balance accuracy.

FAQs
What is ISO/IEC 17025 and why does it matter for laboratory balances?
ISO/IEC 17025 is the international standard for testing and calibration laboratory competence. A laboratory balance used to generate measurements that appear in accredited test reports or calibration certificates must be calibrated with full metrological traceability, with measurement uncertainty reported on the calibration certificate. In most countries, results from non-accredited laboratories are not accepted by regulators, suppliers, or customers without additional verification.
What measurement uncertainty must be reported on a balance calibration certificate under ISO/IEC 17025?
The expanded uncertainty at approximately 95% confidence — calculated by multiplying the combined standard uncertainty by a coverage factor of 2 — must be reported at each calibration point. The certificate must also state the conformity decision rule applied, documenting whether measurement uncertainty was taken into account when determining pass/fail conformity with the specified tolerance.
Does ISO/IEC 17025 require calibration by an accredited laboratory?
Yes, for primary calibrations that establish metrological traceability. The calibration service provider’s scope of accreditation must include mass measurement at the readability level of the balance being calibrated. In-house verification checks supplement accredited calibration but do not replace it unless the in-house capability is itself within the laboratory’s own accreditation scope.
How does ISO/IEC 17025 differ from GMP and GLP for laboratory balance calibration?
ISO/IEC 17025 specifically requires reported measurement uncertainty on every calibration certificate and calibration by an accredited provider for primary traceability. GMP requires equipment qualification (IQ/OQ/PQ) and USP Chapter 41 performance verification. GLP requires calibration traceability and documented SOPs. All three require NIST-traceable calibration, but ISO/IEC 17025 is the most technically specific about uncertainty reporting and the calibration provider’s accreditation status.
What happened to the ILAC MRA mark in 2026?
Effective January 1, 2026, ILAC and IAF merged to form the Global Accreditation Cooperation Incorporated. Existing accreditations remain valid with no interruption, but the former ILAC MRA and IAF MLA marks will be phased out by January 1, 2029. New certificates issued after January 2026 by accreditation bodies transitioning to the new framework will carry updated marks. Laboratories should confirm their accreditation body’s transition timeline when requesting new certificates.
Conclusion
ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation represents the highest internationally recognized standard of laboratory competence. For a laboratory balance, meeting that standard requires more than a calibrated instrument — it requires a complete metrological framework: traceable reference weights certified by an accredited provider, a documented uncertainty budget for every calibration, calibration certificates that report expanded uncertainty and state the conformity decision rule applied, and a risk-justified calibration interval supported by historical performance data.
The January 2026 merger of ILAC and IAF into the Global Accreditation Cooperation Incorporated has unified the international recognition framework — results from accredited laboratories now carry acceptance across 135 economies through a single mutual recognition structure. For laboratories seeking or maintaining accreditation, the balance calibration program is one of the most frequently assessed elements during accreditation audits. Building it correctly from the beginning — with the documentation, traceability, and uncertainty reporting that the standard requires — is the most reliable path to audit readiness and sustained accreditation.








